U.S. bishops concerned about sending troops to the border

WASHINGTON — The chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops' Committee on Migration committee said April 11 he agrees with concerns
raised issued by U.S. bishops on the southern border about President Donald
Trump's call to deploy National Guard troops to the region.

"Current law entitles those fleeing persecution and arriving
in our country to due process as their claims are reviewed," Bishop Joe S.
Vasquez of Austin, Texas, said in a statement.

He reiterated the April 6 statement by eight Catholic bishops
from U.S.-Mexico border states that said: "Seeking refuge from persecution
and violence in search of a peaceful life for oneself and one's family is not a
crime."

The bishop also noted, "Our faith calls us to respond with
compassion to those who suffer and seek safe haven; we ask our government to do
the same as it seeks to safely and humanely secure the border."

The U.S. bishops who issued a statement concerned about military
troops at the border were: Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller of San Antonio and
four other Texas bishops, including Bishops Daniel E. Flores of Brownsville,
Michael J. Sis of San Angelo, James Tamayo of Laredo and Mark J. Sietz of El
Paso. Other signers included Bishop Edward J. Weisenburger of Tucson, Arizona,
Bishop Robert W. McElroy of San Diego and Bishop Oscar Cantu of Las Cruces, New
Mexico.

The bishops said the U.S.-Mexico border is "not a war zone,
but instead is comprised of many peaceful and law-abiding communities that are
also generous in their response to human suffering."

And seeking refuge from persecution and violence in search of a
peaceful life "is not a crime," they added.

The bishops said they were deeply concerned that the current
"divisive rhetoric often promotes the dehumanization of immigrants as if
all were threats and criminals" and urged Catholics and people of goodwill
"to look past the dehumanizing rhetoric regarding immigrants and remember
that they are a valuable population, our neighbors, and our sisters and
brothers in Christ."

The day after the U.S. bishops' statement, the Mexican bishops'
conference issued a letter to people in Mexico and the United States and the
presidents of both countries, echoing sentiments raised by the U.S. border
bishops and stressing that the Catholic Church could not stand by "in the
face of suffering by our brother migrants as they seek better conditions by
crossing the border to work and contribute to the common good."